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Dr. Kajal Sharma
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Dr. Kajal Sharma

Dr. Kajal Sharma
Doing PG in Ras Shastra and Bhaishajya Kalpana from Desh Bhagat Ayurvedic College and Hospital
Doctor information
Experience:
2 years
Education:
Babe Ke Ayurvedic Medical College & Hospital
Academic degree:
Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery
Area of specialization:
I am specialized in stree rogas and prasuti tantra, and yeah, I kinda feel drawn to it naturally. Women’s health needs more than just textbook solutions, right? It’s about balancing hormones, stress, diet—just the whole lifestyle. I usually work with cases like irregular periods, pcos, white discharge, infertility, heavy bleeding or sometimes even menopause issues. Every patient walks in with a different story n I try to listen close before jumping into any treatment plan. In prasuti tantra, I got experience with prenatal and postnatal care—helping women during pregnancy, labor prep, and recovery phase. It’s not just about medicines... it’s also about creating a safe space where they feel heard. I use therapies like yoni pichu, uttarbasti, basti when needed—but only after understanding their prakriti and agni. I do believe each woman’s body reacts in its own way, and what works for one may totally not suit another. Even in tough cases, I rely on simple but deep Ayurvedic principles. When you follow the root-cause approach, results come even if slow. That patience is important.
Achievements:
I am quick at grasping stuff and adapt pretty well in high-pressure setups. Working as a general physician in an ayurvedic hospital gave me hands-on experince with a wide variety of cases, like fevers, digestion probs, skin flares etc.. I didn’t just follow protocols blindly—I liked figuring out what herbs fit which patient better. That exposure helped sharpen my diagnostic skills lot faster than I expected, though I'm still learning everyday... ayurveda keeps surprising me, tbh!

I am someone who really got into women’s health right from the early days of my practice. I had one year of hands-on work at an obstetrics and gynecology hospital—where things were non-stop, fast-paced and honestly kinda overwhelming at times, but I learned a lot. Managing high-risk cases, routine ANC, post-natal care... all of that kinda gave me a real look at what patients go through, not just medically but emotionally too. Then after that phase, I moved into Ayurvedic Sewa Samhiti for another year. It was a very different pace but just as demanding in its own way. There I really started to connect deeper with patients, seeing how chronic issues responded to lifestyle corrections and herbs when done consistently. It was less about rush and more about balance. That year helped me appreciate prakriti-based treatment more than before. After that, I also spent about 6 months in an IVF centre. Fertility is delicate, and the cases there needed so much empathy along with protocol-based care. While I wasn’t directly handling all procedures, I did get involved with counseling, prepping, and supporting the treatments—plus learning how Ayurvedic support like uttarbasti or rasayan therapy could help in conjunction. Honestly, that combo approach stuck with me. Now when I see patients, I try to not just look at what disease they have but also how they live and feel. That's where diagnosis actually begins, no? I like to listen carefully—sometimes people don’t say things directly, but you notice it in their energy, their words, or even what they avoid telling you. I don’t rush treatment, and I don’t believe in one-size-fits-all either. What worked for someone might not work at all for the next. That's why I focus lot on understanding their history, diet, sleep, mental state—all of it counts. For me, every patient’s journey is slightly different and honestly, that’s what keeps this field meaningful. Not just curing, but understanding. Sometimes feels like I learn as much from patients as they do from me. I just try to keep that curiosity going.